XPost: alt.rec.hiking, alt.los-angeles, alt.wildland.firefighting
XPost: sac.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
Hikers and outdoor enthusiasts have long been drawn to Skull Rock north
of Sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades.
A relatively short hike on the Temescal Ridge trail reveals the
skeletal-shaped Skull Rock and dramatic Pacific Ocean views.
Now, this area is the subject of an investigation as a potential
starting point for the Palisades fire, which burned thousands of
structures last week.
It’s unclear where the fire started, and its cause is under investigation.
The general area was the site of a small fire on New Year’s Eve that
burned for a few hours before fire officials said they snuffed it out
with help from water-dropping helicopter.
Sources with knowledge of the investigation told The Times that
officials are aware of the earlier fire and its general proximity to the Palisades fire. They are looking into whether that could be the cause.
Because the area is frequented by the public, the sources said it’s
possible a new fire was somehow sparked there on Tuesday. The earlier
fire appears to be sparked by fireworks, officials said.
As for the Palisades fire, the sources — who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly — said it appears to have human origins, but that the investigation is ongoing.
They noted that area is frequented by hikers, teenagers and others.
A specialized team from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives is arriving in L.A. and will begin processing the scene Monday.
After dropping his kids off at school around 8:15 a.m. on the day the
Palisades fire started, Darrin Hurwitz drove to the area to hike.
He did a five-mile loop that took him up above Skull Rock, and surveyed
the burn scar from the New Year’s fire.
“Around the same time I noticed a bit of a smoky smell. I didn’t make
much of it. I figured it was either coming from somewhere else or was
the remnants of the fire itself,” he told The Times.
He had done another hike days earlier in Malibu where the Franklin fire
had burned a few weeks earlier and noticed a “faint ash smell.” But the smell on Tuesday near Skull Rock was stronger, he said, and he wondered
whether the wind had rustled up ash.
One of his neighbors also smelled the smoke, he later learned.
“The timing of this was about an hour before the fire,” he said. “Now, what that all means, I don’t know. Could it be possible that there were
still some embers that weren’t out and the winds were kind of rustling
them up?
The fire was first reported about an hour late from the address on North
Piedra Morada Drive where Nic Libonati’s family lives. In an interview
with The Times last week, Libonati confirmed that he was the first to
call 911 and that he went to alert his neighbors to the fire.
When Libonati and his sister first spied the fire, he said, it was about
two miles from their home. But he knew they were in trouble when he
tried to hose down their plants and the wind blew the water back into
his face. Libonati realized the flames were headed in their direction.
The Times listed Skull Rock as a top Southern California hike,
describing it this way: “Enjoy heavily shaded switchbacks under oaks and coastal chaparral hillsides as you ascend on the Temescal Ridge trail
toward panoramic viewpoints that stretch from Santa Monica to the
Channel Islands on a clear day. Skull Rock and its boulder buddies are
the midpoint of your geological journey and a great locale for some rock scrambling to a picnic perch.”
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-01-12/on-an-ocean-view-trail-questions-swirl-about-what-and-who-started-palisades-fire
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